Reply to: RE>4.776 Varia: Null object, O
In regards to sentence-final "have", I'm not sure if this an obvious
example, but what about exchanges like:
S1: "I thought you were going to buy her a present?"
S2: "Well, I would have, but she didn't buy ME one."
This is extremely common.

May I add to Robert Beard's posting about null objects with -mitkommen- etc.,
the following French examples (not checked but known to be vernacular speech):
-courir apr\es-, and -cocher avec-, for starters in Romance?
Bill Bennett.

Re:4.776 Null object
I refer to the discussion of what has been termed "null object", with verbs
such as "kommt er mit?" A friend who is a native German (speaker) has pointed
out "kommt er mit mit mir?" as vernacular but common. If this is so, we are
certainly not dealing with null object generally - "mitkommen" seems like
"fortkommen", etc., "mit" and "fort" as prefix, adverb??
Bill Bennett.